Organophosphorus acid anhydride (OP) nerve agents are potent inhibitors which rapidly phosphonylate acetylcholinesterase (AChE) and then may undergo an internal dealkylation reaction (called "aging") to produce an OP-enzyme conjugate that cannot be reactivated. To understand the basis for irreversible inhibition, we solved the structures of aged conjugates obtained by reaction of Torpedo californica AChE (TcAChE) with diisopropylphosphorofluoridate (DFP), O-isopropylmethylphosponofluoridate (sarin), or O-pinacolylmethylphosphonofluoridate (soman) by X-ray crystallography to 2.3, 2.6, or 2.2 A resolution, respectively. The highest positive difference density peak corresponded to the OP phosphorus and was located within covalent bonding distance of the active-site serine (S200) in each structure. The OP-oxygen atoms were within hydrogen-bonding distance of four potential donors from catalytic subsites of the enzyme, suggesting that electrostatic forces significantly stabilize the aged enzyme. The active sites of aged sarin- and soman-TcAChE were essentially identical and provided structural models for the negatively charged, tetrahedral intermediate that occurs during deacylation with the natural substrate, acetylcholine. Phosphorylation with DFP caused an unexpected movement in the main chain of a loop that includes residues F288 and F290 of the TcAChE acyl pocket. This is the first major conformational change reported in the active site of any AChE-ligand complex, and it offers a structural explanation for the substrate selectivity of AChE.
Mutagenesis of the human A(3) adenosine receptor (AR) suggested that certain amino acid residues contributed differently to ligand binding and activation processes. Here we demonstrated that various adenosine modifications, including adenine substitution and ribose ring constraints, also contributed differentially to these processes. The ligand effects on cyclic AMP production in intact CHO cells expressing the A(3)AR and in receptor binding were compared. Notably, the simple 2-fluoro group alone or 2-chloro in combination with N(6)-substitution dramatically diminished the efficacy of adenosine derivatives, even converting agonist into antagonist. Other affinity-increasing substitutions, including N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl) 4 and the (Northern)-methanocarba 15, also reduced efficacy, except in combination with a flexible 5'-uronamide. 2-Cl-N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl) derivatives, both in the (N)-methanocarba (i.e., of the Northern conformation) and riboside series 18 and 5, respectively, were potent antagonists with little residual agonism. Ring-constrained 2',3'-epoxide derivatives in both riboside and (N)-methanocarba series 13 and 21, respectively, and a cyclized (spiral) 4',5'-uronamide derivative 14 were synthesized and found to be human A(3)AR antagonists. 14 bound potently at both human (26 nM) and rat (49 nM) A(3)ARs. A rhodopsin-based A(3)AR model, containing all domains except the C-terminal region, indicated separate structural requirements for receptor binding and activation for these adenosine analogues. Ligand docking, taking into account binding of selected derivatives at mutant A(3)ARs, featured interactions of TM3 (His95) with the adenine moiety and TMs 6 and 7 with the ribose 5'-region. The 5'-OH group of antagonist N(6)-(3-iodobenzyl)-2-chloroadenosine 5 formed a H-bond with N274 but not with S271. The 5'-substituent of nucleoside antagonists moved toward TM7 and away from TM6. The conserved Trp243 (6.48) side chain, involved in recognition of the classical (nonnucleoside) A(3)AR antagonists but not adenosine-derived ligands, displayed a characteristic movement exclusively upon docking of agonists. Thus, A(3)AR activation appeared to require flexibility at the 5'- and 3'-positions, which was diminished in (N)-methanocarba, spiro, and epoxide analogues, and was characteristic of ribose interactions at TM6 and TM7.
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